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If someone asks a question on here, is it not fair to assume they want an answer from a human being and not a site like Wikipedia?

Any idiot can look an answer up from them, so why do people answer with 'wikipedia answers'?

2007-12-11 08:51:19 · 26 answers · asked by Anonymous in Computers & Internet Internet Wikipedia

I'm not knocking wikipedia...I'm just saying we can go there for ourselves if we want to.

If I ask a question here I want an answer from a living, breathing human being...not another web site.

2007-12-11 09:18:32 · update #1

26 answers

Do you mean in relation to answers on here? (I thought this was blatantly obvious, but people seem to be answering as if you're asking in general). If the question is trivial and trite, perhaps it only deserves a Wikipedia link. For example, you couldn't answer this question with a Wikipedia article, despite what some have unhumourously tried to do.

And hey, sometimes a Wikipedia link can be expansive and informative; it would be a more just contribution than just repeating what has already said, as many people are prone to doing.

2007-12-12 05:40:25 · answer #1 · answered by second only to trollalalala 5 · 0 0

This is a philosophy question in a way. I think the answer is that people want immediacy and the chance to interact. Despite the (almost self-evident) fact that Wikipedia is more likely to have information on every subject, sometimes people want the nuances as well as the raw information. Wikipedia is good on the raw part but sometimes the nuances get edited away.

Still, "any idiot" can ask a question - often because they are too lazy to do the research. I've stopped answering Chemistry questions precisely because I refuse to do someone else's homework. I've already got my academic degrees (yes, plural - "Doc" in my signature is not an accident). I don't need (and won't get) the grades that the questioners get when they turn in homework they don't understand.

When someone asks a question that doesn't look like homework, I'm more likely to answer now. But the truth is, I refuse to be responsible for helping someone else "dumb themselves down" by not doing their own homework.

Which is why I sometimes send someone to Wikipedia rather than just answer it. If it looks like homework and sounds like homework and smells like homework, odds are it isn't a random question. In which case I want someone to do for himself/herself. Not every answer needs to be laid out on a silver platter.

2007-12-11 22:59:22 · answer #2 · answered by The_Doc_Man 7 · 0 0

The idea is to provide an answer to the user question. If that means that Wikipedia provides this answer, let the asker be the judge and save us a lot of time. If the asker is not happy with the answer, he/she can not choose it as the best answer.

Second, you are assuming that every asker knows how to search on the web. Perhaps the user doesn't know how to search effectively and efficiently for what he/she desires.

I understand your frustration, but I don't think Wikipedia should be banned.

2007-12-11 17:02:08 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Well I personally think that this site is worse. On Wikipedia, users are encouraged to edit and improve that particular subject, and wildly inaccurate information is usually deleted.

Here the only incentive given to answer questions is points, leading to the popular answer "I don't know" or "2 points". Especially for the more intellectual questions. I think a lot of the time people only ask questions because they cannot be bothered to look for the information themselves and want it quickly. So to sum it up nah, I think we should keep Wikipedia.

2007-12-11 17:35:59 · answer #4 · answered by Shaddap 3 · 0 0

Everyone is competing for the best answer, and while there are some who are great at thinking out of the box or thinking off the top of the heads, there are others who are not quite so literate and need a bit of help to present themselves in a good light, hence they turn to websites like wikipedia and others. Hope this helps!

2007-12-11 17:00:36 · answer #5 · answered by Diane B 6 · 0 0

No I wouldn't say so as they most of the people asking the questions have never heard of let alone encounterd Wikipedia hence them asking the questions on here.

I think answers are better personalised rather than straight copy / paste, however Wikipedia is a fantastic site crammed full of useful information.

2007-12-12 08:02:47 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

A lot of people aren't really willing to go to the effort of searching for something in Wikipedia ...

Actually, when you get right down to it ... why ask anything in Y!A, you can just go and search the internet. Most of us (or at least me) will give the answer and then put the Wikipedia (or any other webpage) we got the answer from as a reference ... to prove our answer as it were.

2007-12-12 04:44:35 · answer #7 · answered by Animated Meanderings 4 · 0 0

People use what they know and asking a question on here and they might not have remembered to use Wikipedia

We can choose the best answers, so its the users option to decide if wikipedia answers are valid and good answers

2007-12-11 16:56:52 · answer #8 · answered by whycantigetagoodnickname 7 · 2 0

I have noticed that too, why doesn't the asker just look on Wikipedia for themselves in the first place. I have been looking at the questions on here and to be honest most of them appear to be penned by either people of school age or people with just no common sense.

2007-12-11 16:56:30 · answer #9 · answered by georgeygirl 5 · 2 0

Wikipedia to be fair is usually accurate and to be fair more often accurate than some of the answers on here?

Does it give any answer more credence than another?

Anybody that can toggle a search engine is going to find more specific answers to any question by looking on topic.

Is using the net to answer a question fair should be the real question?

Suppose it depends on the question???

2007-12-11 17:05:45 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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